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<Title>Boost Graph Library: Converting Existing Graphs to BGL</Title>
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<H1><a name="sec:leda-conversion">How to Convert Existing Graphs to BGL</H1>

<P>
Though the main goal of  BGL is to aid the development of new
applications and graph algorithms, there are quite a few existing codes
that could benefit from using BGL algorithms. One way to use the BGL
algorithms with existing graph data structures is to copy data from
the older graph format into a BGL graph which could then be used in
the BGL algorithms. The problem with this approach is that it can be
expensive to make this copy. Another approach is to wrap the existing
graph data structure with a BGL interface.

<P>
The Adaptor pattern&nbsp;[<A
 HREF="bibliography.html#gamma95:_design_patterns">12</A>] typically requires
that the adaptee object be contained inside a new class that provides the
desired interface. This containment is not required when wrapping a
graph for  BGL because the BGL graph interface consists solely of
free (global) functions. Instead of creating a new graph class, you
need to overload all the free functions required by the interface.  We
call this free function wrapper approach <I>external adaptation</I>.

<P>
One of the more commonly used graph classes is the LEDA parameterized
<a
href="https://algorithmic-solutions.info/leda_guide/graphs/param_graph.html"><TT>GRAPH</TT></a>
class&nbsp;[<A HREF="bibliography.html#mehlhorn99:_leda">22</A>]. In
this section we will show how to create a BGL interface for this
class. The first question is which BGL interfaces (or concepts) we
should implement. The following concepts are straightforward and easy
to implement on top of LEDA: <a
href="./VertexListGraph.html">VertexListGraph</a>, <a
href="./BidirectionalGraph.html">BidirectionalGraph</a>, and <a
href="./MutableGraph.html">MutableGraph</a>.

<P>
All types associated with a BGL graph class are accessed though the
<TT>graph_traits</TT> class. We can partially specialize this traits
class for the LEDA <TT>GRAPH</TT> class in the following way. The
<TT>node</TT> and <TT>edge</TT> are the LEDA types for representing
vertices and edges. The LEDA <TT>GRAPH</TT> is for directed graphs, so
we choose <TT>directed_tag</TT> for the <TT>directed_category</TT>.
The LEDA <TT>GRAPH</TT> does not automatically prevent the insertion
of parallel edges, so we choose <TT>allow_parallel_edge_tag</TT> for
the <TT>edge_parallel_category</TT>. The return type for the LEDA
function <TT>number_of_nodes()</TT> and <TT>number_of_edges()</TT> is
<TT>int</TT>, so we choose that type for the
<TT>vertices_size_type</TT> and <tt>edges_size_type</tt> of the
graph. The iterator types will be more complicated, so we leave that
for later.

<P>
<PRE>
namespace boost {
  template &lt;class vtype, class etype&gt;
  struct graph_traits&lt; GRAPH&lt;vtype,etype&gt; &gt; {
    typedef node vertex_descriptor;
    typedef edge edge_descriptor;

    // iterator typedefs...

    typedef directed_tag directed_category;
    typedef allow_parallel_edge_tag edge_parallel_category;
    typedef int vertices_size_type;
    typedef int edges_size_type;
  };
} // namespace boost
</PRE>

<P>
First we will write the <TT>source()</TT> and <TT>target()</TT>
functions of the <a href="./IncidenceGraph.html">IncidenceGraph</a>
concept, which is part of the <a
href="./VertexListGraph.html">VertexListGraph</a> concept. We use the
LEDA <TT>GRAPH</TT> type for the graph parameter, and use
<TT>graph_traits</TT> to specify the edge parameter and the vertex
return type. We could also just use the LEDA types <TT>node</TT> and
<TT>edge</TT> here, but it is better practice to always use
<TT>graph_traits</TT>. If there is a need to change the associated
vertex or edge type, you will only need to do it in one place, inside
the specialization of <TT>graph_traits</TT> instead of throughout your
code. LEDA provides <TT>source()</TT> and <TT>target()</TT> functions,
so we merely call them.

<P>
<PRE>
namespace boost {
  template &lt;class vtype, class etype&gt;
  typename graph_traits&lt; GRAPH&lt;vtype,etype&gt; &gt;::vertex_descriptor
  source(
    typename graph_traits&lt; GRAPH&lt;vtype,etype&gt; &gt;::edge_descriptor e,
    const GRAPH&lt;vtype,etype&gt;&amp; g)
  {
    return source(e);
  }

  template &lt;class vtype, class etype&gt;
  typename graph_traits&lt; GRAPH&lt;vtype,etype&gt; &gt;::vertex_descriptor
  target(
    typename graph_traits&lt; GRAPH&lt;vtype,etype&gt; &gt;::edge_descriptor e,
    const GRAPH&lt;vtype,etype&gt;&amp; g)
  {
    return target(e);
  }
} // namespace boost
</PRE>

<P>
The next function from <a
href="./IncidenceGraph.html">IncidenceGraph</a> that we need to
implement is <TT>out_edges()</TT>. This function returns a pair of
out-edge iterators. Since LEDA does not use STL-style iterators we
need to implement some. There is a very handy boost utility for
implementing iterators, called <TT>iterator_adaptor</TT>.  Writing a
standard conforming iterator classes is actually quite difficult,
harder than you may think. With the <TT>iterator_adaptor</TT> class,
you just implement a policy class and the rest is taken care of. The
following code is the policy class for our out-edge iterator. In LEDA,
the edge object itself is used like an iterator. It has functions
<TT>Succ_Adj_Edge()</TT> and <TT>Pred_Adj_Edge()</TT> to move to the
next and previous (successor and predecessor) edge. One gotcha in
using the LEDA <TT>edge</TT> as an iterator comes up in the
<TT>dereference()</TT> function, which merely returns the edge
object. The dereference operator for standard compliant iterators must
be a const member function, which is why the edge argument is
const. However, the return type should not be const, hence the need
for <TT>const_cast</TT>.

<P>
<PRE>
namespace boost {
  struct out_edge_iterator_policies
  {
    static void increment(edge&amp; e)
    { e = Succ_Adj_Edge(e,0); }

    static void decrement(edge&amp; e)
    { e = Pred_Adj_Edge(e,0); }

    template &lt;class Reference&gt;
    static Reference dereference(type&lt;Reference&gt;, const edge&amp; e)
    { return const_cast&lt;Reference&gt;(e); }

    static bool equal(const edge&amp; x, const edge&amp; y)
    { return x == y; }
  };
} // namespace boost
</PRE>

<P>
Now we go back to the <TT>graph_traits</TT> class, and use
<TT>iterator_adaptor</TT> to fill in the
<TT>out_edge_iterator</TT>. We use the <TT>iterator</TT> type
to specify the associated types of the iterator, including iterator
category and value type.

<P>
<PRE>
  namespace boost {
    template &lt;class vtype, class etype&gt;
    struct graph_traits&lt; GRAPH&lt;vtype,etype&gt; &gt; {
      // ...
      typedef iterator_adaptor&lt;edge,
        out_edge_iterator_policies,
        iterator&lt;std::bidirectional_iterator_tag,edge&gt;
      &gt; out_edge_iterator;
      // ...
    };
  } // namespace boost
</PRE>

<P>
With the <TT>out_edge_iterator</TT> defined in <TT>graph_traits</TT> we
are ready to define the <TT>out_edges()</TT> function. The following
definition looks complicated at first glance, but it is really quite
simple. The return type should be a pair of out-edge iterators, so we
use <TT>std::pair</TT> and then <TT>graph_traits</TT> to access the
out-edge iterator types. In the body of the function we construct the
out-edge iterators by passing in the first adjacenct edge for the
begin iterator, and 0 for the end iterator (which is used in LEDA as
the end sentinel). The 0 argument to <TT>First_Adj_Edge</TT> tells
LEDA we want out-edges (and not in-edges).

<P>
<PRE>
namespace boost {
  template &lt;class vtype, class etype&gt;
  inline std::pair&lt;
    typename graph_traits&lt; GRAPH&lt;vtype,etype&gt; &gt;::out_edge_iterator,
    typename graph_traits&lt; GRAPH&lt;vtype,etype&gt; &gt;::out_edge_iterator &gt;
  out_edges(
    typename graph_traits&lt; GRAPH&lt;vtype,etype&gt; &gt;::vertex_descriptor u,
    const GRAPH&lt;vtype,etype&gt;&amp; g)
  {
    typedef typename graph_traits&lt; GRAPH&lt;vtype,etype&gt; &gt;
      ::out_edge_iterator Iter;
    return std::make_pair( Iter(First_Adj_Edge(u,0)), Iter(0) );
  }
} // namespace boost
</PRE>

<P>
The rest of the iterator types and interface functions are constructed
using the same techniques as above.  The complete code for the LEDA
wrapper interface is in <a
href="../../../boost/graph/leda_graph.hpp"><TT>boost/graph/leda_graph.hpp</TT></a>. In
the following code we use the BGL concept checks to make sure that we
correctly implemented the BGL interface. These checks do not test the
run-time behaviour of the implementation; that is tested in <a
href="../test/graph.cpp"><TT>test/graph.cpp</TT></a>.

<P>
<PRE>
  #include &lt;boost/graph/graph_concepts.hpp&gt;
  #include &lt;boost/graph/leda_graph.hpp&gt;

  int
  main(int,char*[])
  {
    typedef GRAPH&lt;int,int&gt; Graph;
    BOOST_CONCEPT_ASSERT(( VertexListGraphConcept&lt;Graph&gt; ));
    BOOST_CONCEPT_ASSERT(( BidirectionalGraphConcept&lt;Graph&gt; ));
    BOOST_CONCEPT_ASSERT(( MutableGraphConcept&lt;Graph&gt; ));
    return 0;
  }
</PRE>



<br>
<HR>
<TABLE>
<TR valign=top>
<TD nowrap>Copyright &copy; 2000-2001</TD><TD>
<A HREF="http://www.boost.org/people/jeremy_siek.htm">Jeremy Siek</A>,
Indiana University (<A
HREF="mailto:jsiek@osl.iu.edu">jsiek@osl.iu.edu</A>)<br>
<A HREF="http://www.boost.org/people/liequan_lee.htm">Lie-Quan Lee</A>, Indiana University (<A HREF="mailto:llee@cs.indiana.edu">llee@cs.indiana.edu</A>)<br>
<A HREF="https://homes.cs.washington.edu/~al75">Andrew Lumsdaine</A>,
Indiana University (<A
HREF="mailto:lums@osl.iu.edu">lums@osl.iu.edu</A>)
</TD></TR></TABLE>

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